Apartment Showcase Blog

Northern Virginia’s Animal Allies Rescue Group Is the Cat’s Meow

Animal Allies

Staring contest: Animal Allies seems to have a particular affection for felines, but the group offers dogs for adoption, too. (dungodung via Flickr)

Today, we’re gonna talk about an organization that’s near and dear to me, or, sniff, sniff, OK, an organization that bequeathed me Minx, a six-pound ball of gray fur and attitude.

I’m talking about Animal Allies.

Minx – or Minxies, as she’s commonly known – is a half-Tonkinese kitty who everyone mistakes as a Russian Blue. But I knew that wasn’t true early on.

How? Well, besides the fact that the friendly lady at Animal Allies told me Minx was half-Tonka, she meows in Tonkinese (mother) and regular kitty (hit-and-run dad) but not in Russian.

Yes, she’s beautiful, and no, you can’t touch her, even if you’re a cat person. Get out of here. I’m the only one.

[ Related: Woodley Park: Lions, Tigers and Bears! Oh, My! ]

We’re a misanthropic pair, Minx and I. No one else will have us, so we’re stuck together, bearers of three languages and a miserable fortune. But we’re still here, and we have rights, too.

Animal Allies is “a nonprofit, all-volunteer organization dedicated to the rescue of homeless and abandoned animals.” Founded in 1984, Animal Allies is spread out all over Northern Virginia.

These people really care about cats and will work to find them a home. Believe me, they stayed on me until I adopted Minx. Like I said, for whatever reason, I’m the only person that cat’s ever seemed to like. Lucky me.

How about you? Living and working in the Washington, D.C., area can be stressful enough to break anyone. Wouldn’t you want to come home to a furry, purring pal? Sometimes it feels like a pet is the only true friend one can have. Just check out some of these cuties.

As you can see on their listings, the folks at Animal Allies make sure you know what you’re getting. Does the kitty in question like other cats? Dogs? Kids? Does it have health issues? Has it been declawed?

[ Related: Alexandria Leaves Dog Owners Howling With Delight ]

Each animal is also checked for diseases and spayed or neutered (if they’re too young, you’ll need to have them spayed or neutered at the appropriate time as a condition of adoption). There is an adoption fee of course, but your money goes right back into rescuing animals.

Another good thing about Animal Allies is that it’s a no-kill shelter, so you can feel good about that.

The organization provides other ways for you to help cats as well, including opportunities to foster a cat, act as an adoption show coordinator, or donate funds or time.

If you’re an apartment renter in Northern Virginia – or anywhere in the metro area, really – get on the site and find yourself a lifelong friend.

Springfield: Parks, Shopping and One Heck of a Morning Commute

Filed under: Springfield, Va. — Scott D @ 12:01 pm on October 29, 2010
Race car

Rush hour: At times, Springfield's Mixing Bowl feels more like a racetrack than a roadway.

Springfield, Va., brings to mind many things. There’s the mythical hometown for “The Simpsons.” There’s “Jessie’s Girl” and “I’ve Done Everything for You” from ’80s troubadour-cum-“Dr. Noah Drake” Rick Springfield (“Everything” is also a Sammy Hagar cover. Freaking Sammy Hagar, who I’ve blasted on this blog before. Sorry, Sammy, but you still can’t sing a lick). There appear to be quite a few Springfields in the United States. Sammy Hagar (again), Bart Simpson, “General Hospital”, what is all of this leading up to?

I forget … oh yes, Springfield in Fairfax County can make you forget about all of the above. According to the 2006-08 American Community Survey 3-Year Estimate, Springfield had a population of 34,089. (It must also be noted that the same survey listed the population for West Springfield as 29,113, and the 2000 census listed North Springfield as having 9,173 residents. All together, there are likely more than 73,000 people living in the general, spread-out area today.)

Springfield proper is located 13 miles southwest of downtown Washington, D.C., and the apartment renter in Springfield has three convenient ways of commuting to the city. There’s your car, I-395 and two rail choices: the WMATA Metrorail Franconia-Springfield stop on the Blue Line, which also houses a Virginia Railway Express stop. Let’s see what this unincorporated town has to offer besides convenient commuting to the capital and Sammy Hagar, d’oh!

Springfield offers renters a great place to shop in Springfield Mall, which features anchors Macys, Target and JCPenney. It also offers Lake Accotink Park, a 493-acre green space that includes:

  • Wetlands, streams, waterfowl and a 55-acre lake
  • Picnic areas with grills, pavilions, play fields, a playground and trails
  • A miniature golf course, antique carousel, snack bar and restrooms
  • In season, the park rents canoes, rowboats and pedal boats. They’ve even been known to give tour-boat rides.

As it turns out, there are actually plenty of nearby parks for the Springfield denizen, including another monster, Huntley Meadows Park. While not in Springfield proper (or any of the Springfields, for that matter), it’s only a short drive away. According to its website: “Nestled in Fairfax County’s Hybla Valley, Huntley Meadows Park is a rich, natural island in the suburban sea of Northern Virginia.” That’s a poetic way of describing 1,425 acres of forest, meadows, wetlands, and of course the creatures that live there, including beavers, frogs, herons and an incalculable number of insects.

Regardless of that good stuff, no description of Springfield would be complete without a nod toward the city’s best-known feature. Whether it’s a positive or negative, well, that depends on how you look at it. And whether you typically take to the wheel like Dale Earnhardt Jr. coming down the backstretch at Talladega with four-wheeled revenge and checker-flagged glory on your mind. Of course, I’m talking about the Mixing Bowl. Also known by its proper name – the Springfield Interchange (the Virginia Department of Transportation uses both terms interchangeably) – the Mixing Bowl is where I-95, the I-495 Capital Beltway and I-395 converge. An incredible 430,000 cars run through it each day, making it one of the busiest interchanges on the East Coast.

To get even more technical, the Springfield Interchange Improvement Project that began in 1999 and ended in 2007 was supposed to squash the Mixing Bowl tag, and it involved building 50 bridges and ramps to make the Mixing Bowl easier and safer to navigate – at a price tag of $676 million. A few years back, driving in the Mixing Bowl was pretty risky stuff. A favorite maneuver of mine was trying to hit an exit ramp on the right, only to realize with stark horror that another highway was merging with me at the same time – also on the right! It was the stuff of nightmares and arcade-game revelry, take your pick. I haven’t been in the Mixing Bowl lately, but whatever improvements they’ve made to it, the Springfield Interchange will surely quicken the pulse of any driver. Even that ding-dong who can’t drive 55!

As a side note to this very long post, check out local photographer Beth Rado’s pictures of the Mixing Bowl as it underwent renovations.